FEATURE: China restores Chiang Kai-shek’s Nanjing house

AFP, NANJING, China

A visitor stands outside a restored 80-year-old house once used by Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) leader Chiang Kai-shek, in China’s Jiangsu Province on Oct. 29. Chinese Communist Party authorities have restored the building, which is in Nanjing and close to Sun Yat-sen’s tomb.

Photo: AFP

Chinese Communist Party authorities have restored an 80-year-old house once used by Chiang Kai-shek (蔣介石), as changing relations with Taiwan transform an archenemy into a recognized figure.

Political differences were plastered over as Nanjing — once China’s capital under the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) — spent US$4.9 million to renovate the three-story house at the base of a hill.

It was one of several houses used by Chiang and his wife Soong Mayling (宋美齡) before they fled to Taiwan in 1949 at the end of the Chinese civil war.

Chiang led Taiwan as president until his death 26 years later, still proclaiming himself the rightful ruler of the whole of China.

For decades, the building was kept as a state guesthouse and closed to the public, but the doors were thrown open after a year-long renovation was completed in October.

“This renovation has a very important use for cross-strait cultural exchanges, so we considered that,” said Liao Jinhan, deputy head of the Chinese government agency that administers the surrounding scenic area. “Our feeling is that the house is a very important cultural heritage landmark.”

The chance discovery of an original architectural plan in a closet in the house allowed workers to faithfully restore the building, down to the basement coal room.

“We completely followed the blueprint from that time. You can see from photos of the time, it is exactly the same,” property manager Zhou Zhongxing said.

“The renovation is significant for cross-strait cultural contacts as it shows the mainland’s focus on preserving historical heritage related to the Kuomintang [KMT],” Shanghai Institute for International Studies research fellow Tong Liqun (童立群) said.

“To take relations one step further would mean exchanges in the field of politics, and that is where the two sides are having trouble,” she said.

The historical sensitivity is such that officials commonly refer to the house as the “Mayling Palace” after Chiang’s last wife, despite its status as the former residence of a Chinese head of state.

Soong Mayling was one of the three Soong sisters, who between them married two top Chinese leaders and a wealthy businessman who served as Chinese finance minister.

Few images of Chiang can be seen inside the property, although the study holds a portrait of Sun Yat-sen (孫中山), founding father of the Republic of China — who is revered by both Communists and Nationalists, and whose tomb is on the hill and visible from the house.

An exhibit on the couple’s lives in Taiwan is called “Years on Taiwan island,” highlighting the Chinese doctrine that it is not a country, but part of Chinese territory.

The house has Chinese features, such as the curved roof, but the interior is Western in style, reflecting Soong’s education in the US.

The building also gives subtle hints about the couple’s lifestyle.

Chiang had a room off the main bedroom where he slept, reflecting his military habit of rising early, while Soong Mayling required a Western-style oven, which still survives, and kept ashtrays in the rooms for smoking — a habit she picked up in the US.

A small chapel shows the couple’s embrace of Christianity: Soong Mayling, who was Methodist, insisted that her husband convert to her religion.

“The manor is like its mistress: graceful and elegant, knowing both Chinese and Western style,” a sign reads.